Via: PBS:
JUDY WOODRUFF: Both Binney and Tice suspect that today, the NSA
is doing more than just collecting metadata on calls made in the U.S.
They both point to this CNN interview by former FBI counterterrorism
agent Tim Clemente days after the Boston Marathon bombing. Clemente was
asked if the government had a way to get the recordings of the calls
between Tamerlan Tsarnaev and his wife.
TIM CLEMENTE, former FBI counterterrorism agent: On the national
security side of the house, in the federal government, you know, we have
assets. There are lots of assets at our disposal throughout the
intelligence community and also not just domestically, but overseas.
Those assets allow us to gain information, intelligence on things that
we can’t use ordinarily in a criminal investigation.
All digital communications are — there’s a way to look at digital
communications in the past. And I can’t go into detail of how that’s
done or what’s done. But I can tell you that no digital communication is
secure.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Tice says after he saw this interview on television, he called some former workmates at the NSA.
RUSSELL TICE: Well, two months ago, I contacted some colleagues at
NSA. We had a little meeting, and the question came up, was NSA
collecting everything now? Because we kind of figured that was the goal
all along. And the answer came back. It was, yes, they are collecting
everything, contents word for word, everything of every domestic
communication in this country.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Both of you know what the government says is that
we’re collecting this — we’re collecting the number of phone calls that
are made, the e-mails, but we’re not listening to them.
WILLIAM BINNEY: Well, I don’t believe that for a minute. OK?
I mean, that’s why they had to build Bluffdale, that facility in Utah
with that massive amount of storage that could store all these
recordings and all the data being passed along the fiberoptic networks
of the world. I mean, you could store 100 years of the world’s
communications here. That’s for content storage. That’s not for
metadata.
Metadata if you were doing it and putting it into the systems we
built, you could do it in a 12-by-20-foot room for the world. That’s all
the space you need. You don’t need 100,000 square feet of space that
they have at Bluffdale to do that. You need that kind of storage for
content.
JUDY WOODRUFF: So, what does that say, Russell Tice, about what the
government — you’re saying — your understanding is of what the
government does once these conversations take place, is it your
understanding they’re recorded and kept?
RUSSELL TICE: Yes, digitized and recorded and archived in a facility
that is now online. And they’re kind of fibbing about that as well,
because Bluffdale is online right now.
And that’s where the information is going. Now, as far as
being able to have an analyst look at all that, that’s impossible, of
course. And I think, semantically, they’re trying to say that their
definition of collection is having literally a physical analyst look or
listen, which would be disingenuous.
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